Ohio Biological Survey, Bull. 10, Vol. 11, No. 6 - The Ascomycetes of Ohio IV and V by Bruce Fink;Leafy J. Corrington
page 23 of 56 (41%)
page 23 of 56 (41%)
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Collected in Preble, Hocking, and Adams counties. Over mosses on rocks or bases of trees; or rarely on rocks, soil, bark, or wood. Not previously reported from Ohio, and not a common fungus in the State. 3. Bilimbia naegelii (Hepp) Zwackh. Flora. 45: 505. 1862. _Biatora naegelii_ Hepp, Spor. Flecht. Eur. pl. 4. f. 1. 19. 1853. Thallus of usually flattened granules, these commonly running together to form a moderately thin, more or less roughened, often chinky, ash- or green-gray, or darkening, limited or rarely wide-spread crust; apothecia minute to middle-sized, 0.2 to 0.9 mm. in diameter, adnate or rarely sessile, flesh-colored to dark brown, scattered or clustered, flat with the thin exciple visible to strongly convex with the exciple covered; hypothecium pale or tinged brown; hymenium pale throughout or tinged brown above; paraphyses coherent, semi-distinct to indistinct; asci clavate; spores fusiform-ellipsoid, 4- to 8-celled, 18 to 25 mic. long and 3 to 4 mic. wide. Collected in Highland County. On bark. Not previously reported from Ohio, and doubtless rare in the State. The usual width given for the spores is 4 to 6 mic., and our plant is placed here provisionally. 4. Bilimbia melaena (Nyl.) Th. Fr. Lich. Scand. 383-385. 1871. |
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